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By discovering the meaning of a rare mineral that can be used to track ancient climates, geologists are helping climatologists to better understand what we're probably in for over the next century or two as global warming begins to crank up the heat and, ultimately, to change life as we know it.
For 30 years, iron and manganese have stained Franklin's water brown and formed a dark mineral crust along the inside of its pipes. Now, the city is moving forward with plans for a $7 million filtration plant.
Asbestos has been found in Bozeman High School art classrooms where a new roof is being installed, and while tests have shown no danger of airborne asbestos to students or staff, the school district has closed the rooms and hired a cleanup firm to eliminate any risk.
( Radiological Society of North America ) New research reveals that computed tomography colonography, also known as virtual colonoscopy, has the potential to screen for two diseases at once -- colorectal cancer and osteoporosis, both of which commonly affect adults over age 50.
New research reveals that computed tomography (CT) colonography, also known as virtual colonoscopy, has the potential to screen for two diseases at oncecolorectal cancer and osteoporosis, both of which commonly affect adults over age 50. Results of the study will be presented today at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA).
DENVER - Federal officials say energy exploration on a southern Colorado wildlife refuge won't have significant environmental effects, despite the presence of a prairie dog deemed eligible for federal protection.
Washington (UPI) Dec 1, 2008 - The Arctic Ocean is quickly re-emerging as a strategic area where vital U.S. interests are at stake. The geopolitical and geo-economic importance of the arctic region is rising rapidly, and its mineral wealth will likely transform the region into a booming economic frontier in the 21st century.
Andrew Mead will be back on the football field this week as Western prepares for the Mineral Water Bowl, but it’s his play at Rockhurst last weekend that is noteworthy.
THE gift-giving season must be an environmentalist’s worst nightmare: it leaves behind heaps of packaging waste and often, boxes of unwanted gadgets, clothes, accessories and toys.
Robert Schenkkan’s “The Kentucky Cycle, Part Two,” directed by Trevor Biship for Cal Rep at the Armory, is riveting, monumental, powerful, panoramic, ambitious and wholly satisfying.
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